Warning: Undefined array key "rbname" in /data/rantburg.com/www/pgrecentorg.php on line 14
Hello !
Recent Appearances... Rantburg

Afghanistan
What Do The Taleban Spend Afghanistan’s Money On? Government expenditure under the Islamic Emirate
2023-05-14
Link to full report at the link.
[AfghanistanAnalysts] When the Taleban captured power in 2021, they moved swiftly to take over domestic revenue collection, adopting Ministry of Finance systems for taxes and customs. As insurgents, they had been diligent tax collectors and brought a wealth of experience in collecting money from people, but little in spending it – outside the war effort. Since foreign donors no longer support the Afghan state, it is now Afghan citizens who pay for what their government does. While the Islamic Emirate has been relatively open about revenues, it has been cagey about how it spends money. In this report, AAN’s Kate Clark and Roxanna Shapour have put together what little is known or can be found out about Taleban spending plans and priorities. They find large sums of money allocated to security and contingency codes and relatively little to social services apart from education. They also conclude that following the money reveals how well Afghan bureaucracy continued despite the upheaval of regime change – and how fully the Taleban have captured it.

This report attempts to fill in some of the gaps in Emirate spending, drawing on the very limited data available. It brings together information from three main sources:

The Taleban Ministry of Finance mini-budget for the last quarter of 1400 (21 December 2021 to 20 March 2022) with its breakdown of planned spending of 53.9 billion Afs, which is the best we have from the Emirate about its spending priorities, as the information it subsequently released concerning its 1401 budget was just a few sentences long.
  • ‘Accountability sessions’ held in August and September 2022 in which the Emirate’s senior officials described to journalists, radio listeners and television viewers the achievements of their ministry or other state body during the first year of Taleban rule. Most boasted about the revenues collected, projects or ‘outputs’ related to their organisations and a handful mentioned budgets or staffing.

  • Information on salary payments to state employees, gathered by AAN in interviews conducted between June and August 2022, with a smaller round of interviews in December 2022 and January 2023 to check what, if anything, had changed.

This is the second part of reporting on Emirate finances. Part 1, Taxing the Afghan Nation: What the Taleban’s pursuit of domestic revenues means for citizens, the economy and the state, was published in September 2022.
Link


Afghanistan
Guantanamo detainee Abdul Qayyum Zakir is the acting defense minister of the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan.
2021-08-25
[Twitter]
Related:
Abdul Qayyum Zakir: 2016-05-24 Sirajuddin Haqqani among possible successors of Mullah Mansoor
Abdul Qayyum Zakir: 2012-07-09 'America is not retreating' from Afghanistan
Abdul Qayyum Zakir: 2010-04-23 Taleban rift provokes power struggle over who controls the insurgency
Link


Afghanistan
24 Taliban killed in Kandahar clashes: MoD
2021-03-05
[KhaamaPress] The Ministry of Defense in a released statement on Thursday said that at least 24 Taliban
...Arabic for students...
fighters were killed in Arghandab, Zherai, and Shah Walikot districts of Kandahar province.

MoD stated Afghan national defense and security forces backed by the air support, targeted "terrorists" in Arghandab, Jiri, and Shah Walikot districts of Kandahar province.

The operation resulted in 24 Taliban killed and nine others were maimed, the statement said.

According to the statement, some of the Taliban’s bombs, weapons, and ammunition were also destroyed.

ANDSF during the operation discovered and defused 13 anti-vehicle mines planted in the mentioned districts and Maiwand district of the province to target civilians and soldiers.

This comes as 26 Taliban were killed and 3 other members of the group were maimed in a clash with the Afghan national army a day ago.

Kandahar is one of the Most insecure provinces, where the Taliban have a large influence and are active.
Related:
Arghandab: 2021-03-01 Security Chiefs Visit Kandahar as Concerns Grow Over Insecurity
Arghandab: 2021-03-01 Taliban keeps ties with ‘international terrorism’, Peace hopes shattered
Arghandab: 2021-02-25 42 Taliban killed in Kandahar: MoD
Related:
Zherai: 2021-03-01 Security Chiefs Visit Kandahar as Concerns Grow Over Insecurity
Zherai: 2021-01-23 44 Taliban Killed, 17 IEDs Defused in MoD Missions Throughout Afghanistan
Zherai: 2020-12-29 Fighting Persists in 6 Kandahar Districts: Officials
Related:
Shah Walikot: 2007-12-03 Suicide attack on NATO convoy results in dead boomer
Shah Walikot: 2007-09-03 Police claim killing 120 suspected Talebans
Shah Walikot: 2006-06-22 Afghan violence claims 32 lives
Link


Israel-Palestine-Jordan
Biden administration: Normalization not substitute for Israeli-Palestinian peace
2021-01-27
[IsraelTimes] The deputy US envoy to the United Nations
...boodling on the grand scale...
, Richard Mills, tells the Security Council that the Biden administration will renew ties with the Paleostinians that were frozen under the Trump administration.

He says Washington will urge the government of Israel and the Paleostinian Authority to avoid unilateral steps such as Israeli settlement activity, home demolitions and annexation, Paleostinian payments to Lions of Islam and their families and incitement against Israel.

He says Israel’s recent normalization deals with Arab nations is not a substitute for Israeli-Paleostinian peace.
Related:
Richard Mills: 2010-12-08 Marine 2-star: Battle in Marjah is over
Richard Mills: 2010-11-19 US wants tribesmen to fight Taleban in Afghanistan
Richard Mills: 2010-06-01 US flies Afghan troops to recapture mountain district from Taliban - Taliban mysteriously gone?
Link


Arabia
Saudi-led coalition bombs Yemen prison, scores killed
2019-09-02
[DAWN] Air strikes by a Saudi-led military coalition in southwest Yemen
...an area of the Arabian Peninsula sometimes mistaken for a country. It is populated by more antagonistic tribes and factions than you can keep track of...
hit a prison complex, killing scores of people, Yemen's Iran's Houthi sock puppets
...a Zaidi Shia insurgent group operating in Yemen. They have also been referred to as the Believing Youth. Hussein Badreddin al-Houthi is said to be the spiritual leader of the group and most of the military leaders are his relatives. The legitimate Yemeni government has accused the them of having ties to the Iranian government. Honest they did. The group has managed to gain control over all of Saada Governorate and parts of Amran, Al Jawf and Hajjah Governorates. Its slogan is God is Great, Death to America™, Death to Israel, a curse on the Jews They like shooting off... ummm... missiles that they would have us believe they make at home in their basements. On the plus side, they did murder Ali Abdullah Saleh, which was the only way the country was ever going to be rid of him...
movement and a Red Thingy official said on Sunday.

The Sunni Moslem coalition, which has been battling the Iran-aligned Houthis for over four years in Yemen, said it destroyed a site storing drones and missiles in Dhamar.

Franz Rauchenstein, head of the International Committee of the Red Thingy delegation in Yemen, said after visiting the prison complex and hospitals on Sunday that a "safe presumption is that over 100 had been killed".

The Houthi health ministry earlier said at least 60 bodies were pulled from the rubble at the detention centre, which officials said housed 170 prisoners.

"There are three buildings hit and the building where the detainees were located, most of them or the majority has been killed," Rauchenstein told Rooters by telephone.

"The prisoners in that facility were prisoners that we had visited in relation to the conflict."

He said the Yemeni Red Islamic Thingy Society was still trying to retrieve bodies and that around 50 injured people had been taken to hospital.

Residents told Rooters there had been six air strikes.

"The explosions were strong and shook the city," a resident said. "Afterwards ambulance sirens could be heard until dawn."

Related:
Houthi: 2019-08-30 Yemen roundup
Houthi: 2019-08-30 UAE-backed troops abandon Saudi-led battle against Ansarallah forces in northern Yemen
Houthi: 2019-08-29 King-of-the-Hill Calvinball Intense fighting between Allies in Yemen
Related:
Red Cross: 2019-08-24 WaPo: Islamist Militants ‘Targeting Christians’ in Burkina Faso
Red Cross: 2019-08-20 EU Boosts Aid for Bosnia to Manage Migrant Influx
Red Cross: 2019-08-07 Sahel: Red Cross suspends operations in Timbuktu, Mali, as violence escalates
Related:
Dhamar: 2019-08-25 Houthis reveal Fater-1 missiles they claim it took down the #US MQ-9 #drone
Dhamar: 2019-08-22 U.S. drone shot down over Yemen - officials
Dhamar: 2019-06-07 Houthis kill imam, 9 worshippers for following Saudi Eid al-Fitr moon sighting
Related:
Franz Rauchenstein: 2007-09-30 Taleban free 4 ICRC staff
Link


Afghanistan
Taliban chief secures grip on power
2016-04-11
By subduing dissidents and eliminating rivals, Taleban leader Mullah Akhtar Mansour is rapidly consolidating his authority over the fractious Afghan insurgent movement as it prepares for "decisive" battles in its upcoming spring offensive.

Mansour was declared Taleban leader last summer after the announcement of long-term chief Mullah Omar's death, but many top commanders refused to pledge their loyalty alleging that he rigged the hastily organised selection process.

Despite the infighting, the group saw a new resurgence under the firebrand supremo last year with striking military victories. Analysts predict that this year's offensive, expected to start this month, will be on a bigger scale.

"Let's prepare for decisive strikes against the enemy purely for the sake of Allah with strong determination and high spirits," Mansour told his followers in a recent message posted on the Taleban website.

Ahead of the offensive, Mansour has been rooting out the last vestiges of opposition to his leadership, buying the support of rebellious commanders, quashing renegade groups and luring dissidents with leadership positions, militant sources say.

The Taleban recently announced that two of the most influential dissenters - Mullah Abdul Manan, a brother of Mullah Omar and the deceased leader's son, Mullah Mohammed Yaqoub - will be given posts in Quetta Shura, the Taleban's leadership council.

Last week another vocal critic, Mullah Qayum Zakir, pledged his loyalty to Mansour.

It is not clear if they changed their mind willingly or came under duress from the Pakistani military establishment, which is said to have close ties with Mansour.

Mullah Dadullah, a prominent dissident commander, was killed last year in a gunfight with Mansour loyalists. And Mullah Rassoul, who formed a Taleban breakaway faction, has reportedly been detained by the Pakistani military.

"It's quite clear that Mullah Mansour is putting his power consolidation strategy into overdrive," Michael Kugelman, an Afghanistan expert at the Washington-based think tank the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, said.

"Mansour understands that the time is ripe to do all he can to eliminate what is arguably the Taleban's greatest weakness - its internal power struggles."

New Taleban military gains in recent months have helped cement Mansour's authority by burnishing his credentials as a commander.

His resurgent group has opened new battlefronts across Afghanistan with local forces struggling to beat back the expanding insurgency.

They briefly captured the strategic northern city of Kunduz in September in their most spectacular victory in 14 years and southern opium-rich Helmand province is almost entirely under insurgent control.

"Mansour is preparing for a major military push, more spectacular victories against the government this year," Mullah Qasem, a retired Taleban commander in Helmand, said.

A senior Quetta Shura source said that Mansour is mobilising fighters for major offensives in up to six provinces.

More at the link
Link


India-Pakistan
Powerful Pakistan army chief says he will retire on time
2016-01-27
Pakistan's hugely popular military chief General Raheel Sharif confirmed on Monday he will retire at the end of his tenure this year, ending media speculation surrounding his role and opening up arguably the most powerful position in the country.

Sharif, widely credited with bringing a semblance of security back to the insurgency-plagued country, said in a meeting with his top officials on Monday that he planned to seek no extension.
Of course not -- it would interfere with his plan to be the next President...
"The Mighty Pakistan Army is a great institution," army spokesman Lieutenant General Asim Bajwa quoted Sharif as saying on Twitter. "I don't believe in extension and will retire on the due date."

"Efforts to (root) out terrorism will continue with full vigor and resolve. Pakistan's national interest is supreme and will be safe guarded at all costs."

Sharif was named army chief in 2013, when his predecessor General Ashfaq Kayani's term - which had been extended by three years - came to an end. Sharif is due to step down this year. Former military leaders Pervez Musharraf and Zia ul-Haq also extended their own rule during their time in power.

The announcement, which came less than a week after Taleban-linked militants killed 21 people in an attack on a university in the troubled northwest, was quickly praised on social media.

"Well-done Uncle Rahil Sharif, every #COAS should act like you, no greed but resolve to serve the nation," wrote Ab Rasheed Qureshi, using the acronym for his official title.

Under Sharif the Pakistani military launched an offensive in the tribal areas in June 2014, where militants had previously operated with impunity. The army claims to have killed thousands of insurgents and swept many others over the porous border into Afghanistan, contributing to a boost in security in 2015.
You can see the results, Pakistan is an oasis of stability in a troubled world...
However critics are concerned that rights are being rolled back in the name of defeating terror, citing the creation of military courts and the resumption of hangings after a six-year moratorium, among other moves.

Pakistan has been ruled by the military for more than half its 69-year history and the armed forces are widely seen as controlling defence and foreign policy.
Dawn has its version of the announcement here.
Link


Afghanistan
Afghan president sacks security officials over fall of Kunduz
2015-11-27
Afghan President Ashraf Ghani on Thursday dismissed national security agency officials who he said had neglected their duty to defend the northern city of Kunduz, which Taleban militants briefly captured in September.
Enforcing accountability or blocking blame?
The Taleban's seizure of the city was a major setback for the government, and prompted Washington to prolong the 14-year-old US military engagement in Afghanistan.

Government forces wrested back control of the city after days of fighting in which a US air strike destroyed a hospital run by the Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF) aid group, killing 30 people.

"There was a lack of unified command, and even though there were many Afghan troops in Kunduz, we failed," Ghani said in a speech in Kunduz, an important trade gateway to Central Asia.

Ghani said the National Directorate of Security (NDS), the intelligence agency, had not been successful. The agency's provincial chief was among those dismissed, Ghani's office said.

"I have issued an order to dismiss all NDS personnel who neglected their duties," he said to cheers from the crowd. He did not specify how many officials would be removed, but said some would be prosecuted under the military code and some dismissed.
But it'll be someone, yewbetcha...
Afghan investigators, led by a former NDS chief, had earlier blamed leadership failings for the Taleban's capture of Kunduz. The investigative team did not single out military or government officials for blame, but proposed reforming the National Security Council, a body headed by the president that oversees national security.
Link


Afghanistan
Big quake in Afghanistan and Pakistan kills over 200
2015-10-27
A major earthquake struck the remote Afghan northeast on Monday, killing more than 200 people in Afghanistan and nearby northern Pakistan, injuring hundreds and sending shock waves as far as New Delhi, officials said. The death toll could climb in coming days because communications were down in much of the rugged Hindu Kush mountain range where the quake was centred.

In one of the worst incidents, at least 12 girls were killed in a stampede to flee their school building in Taloqan, just west of Badakhshan province where the tremor's epicentre was located.

"They fell under the feet of other students," said Abdul Razaq Zinda, provincial head of the Afghan National Disaster Management Agency, who reported heavy damage in Takhar.

Shockwaves were felt in New Delhi in northern India and across northern Pakistan, where hundreds of people ran out of buildings as the ground rolled beneath them. No deaths were reported in India.

"We were very scared ... We saw people leaving buildings, and we were remembering our God," Pakistani journalist Zubair Khan said by telephone from the Swat Valley northwest of the capital Islamabad. "I was in my car and, when I stopped my car, the car itself was shaking as if someone was pushing it back and forth."

The United States and Iran were among countries that offered to provide humanitarian assistance to Afghanistan, which already depends heavily on foreign aid after decades of war that have wrecked its economy and infrastructure.

The quake was 213km deep and centred 254km northeast of Kabul in Badakhshan province. The US Geological Survey initially measured the magnitude at 7.7, then revised it down to 7.5.

Just over a decade ago, a 7.6 magnitude quake in another part of northern Pakistan killed about 75,000 people.

In Afghanistan, where rescue and relief work is likely to be complicated by security threats created by an escalating Taleban insurgency, more than 50 people were reported dead in several provinces including Badakhshan, where hundreds were killed in mudslides last year. Hundreds of houses were destroyed, creating additional hardship with wintry temperatures setting in.

In Pakistan, the head of the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Provincial Disaster Management Agency, Amer Afaq said the death toll had reached 167, while military spokesman General Asim Bajwa said nearly 1,000 were injured.

Officials said most of the casualties had occurred in northern and northwestern regions bordering Afghanistan and the death toll was likely to rise. But he said landslides on the unstable slopes of the mountainous region could pose a major problem to rescuers in the coming days.

"Obviously if a landslide comes in to a village, it will take out buildings, but landslides can also take out roads and communications and power systems, so you lose the ability to access remote areas," he said.

In Washington, White House spokesman Josh Earnest said the US Agency for International Development (USAID) was ready to provide emergency shelter and relief supply kits to alleviate immediate hardship.

In Pakistan, the northern area of Chitral, where 20 people were killed, was particularly hard hit.

Journalist Gul Hammad Farooqi, 47, said his house had collapsed. "I was thrown from one side of the road to the other by the strength of the earthquake. I've never experienced anything like it," he said. "There is a great deal of destruction here, and my house has collapsed, but thankfully my children and I escaped."

Further south, the city of Peshawar reported two deaths and at least 150 injured people were being treated at the city's main hospital, the provincial health chief said.

In Afghanistan, international aid agencies working in northern areas reported that cell phone coverage in the affected areas remained down in the hours after the initial quake.

"The problem is we just don't know. A lot of the phone lines are still down," said Scott Anderson, deputy head of office for the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs in Kabul.

Badakhshan provincial governor Shah Waliullah Adib said about 1,450 houses had been destroyed.

The earthquake struck almost exactly six months after Nepal suffered its worst quake on record on April 25. Including the toll from a major aftershock in May, 9,000 people lost their lives there and 900,000 homes were damaged or destroyed there.
Link


Afghanistan
Afghan refugees return reluctantly from Pakistan
2015-09-08
Kabul: Rahim Khan's return to Afghanistan 28 years after fleeing to Pakistan was not the homecoming he had dreamed of. The 60-year-old is one of a growing number of Afghan refugees making the journey back with trepidation, as militant violence intensifies, yet feeling shunned by their adopted country as relations between the neighbours sour.

The rate of returnees has more than quadrupled this year, with 137,000 refugees going back to Afghanistan since January. The number could spike further if the countries fail to agree by December 31 to extend identity cards for two years and allow some 1.5 million registered refugees to stay in Pakistan.
Pakistan has been trying to get rid of its Afghan guests for about a decade. Perhaps this effort will be more effective.
The chill in relations, amid an offensive by Taleban which Kabul blames partly on Pakistan, has put the extension in doubt, along with the future of another million unregistered Afghans.

"First we had to leave here because of war. Now we are coming back to war and bombs," said Khan, speaking at a refugee centre near Kabul where his Pakistan-born grandchildren were being taught the dangers of mines and roadside bombs.

Outside, the thump of exploding ordnance from a nearby army range echoed off arid hills, another reminder that Afghanistan appears no closer to peace than when Khan left during the Soviet occupation.

The dangers mean thousands of people have fled Afghanistan this year, many of them to Europe where governments are struggling to cope with an influx of migrants from the Middle East and beyond.

Yet Khan and others like him say they had little choice but to leave Pakistan. His son Abdul Manan said their life as labourers and fruit vendors in Pakistan-administered Kashmir took a dramatic turn for the worse after Taleban gunmen massacred at least 141 students at an army school in northwest Pakistan in December.

Islamabad blamed the atrocity on militants based across the border,
...they certainly weren't going to blame their own ISI-funded pets...
and anti-Afghan sentiment in Pakistan rose.

Manan said police started showing up at their home, asking to see their papers and threatening them with jail if they failed to pay 1,000-1,500 rupees ($10-15) every few days.

"We decided to leave, there was no other option. We couldn't keep paying 1,500," said Manan. "This is our home and we have no other place to go."

Raja Shafqat Khan, senior official at the police headquarters in Muzaffarabad, administrative capital of Pakistan-administered Kashmir, said he was not aware of the family's complaints. "As a policy, we do not harass Afghan refugees," he said.
"But now that I know who they are and where they live..."
Pakistan's refugee minister, Abdul Qadir Baloch, promised to renew ID cards if he got cabinet approval, and said Pakistan would "not use any coercive measures" to send Afghans back. A

fghan President Ashraf Ghani spent much of his first year in office trying to improve relations and spur peace talks with the Taleban, widely believed to have close links with Pakistan's spy agency that helped create the movement in the 1990s. But efforts stalled and the fledgling peace process collapsed after it was revealed in July that Taleban leader Mullah Omar had died two years earlier.

A spate of lethal attacks in Kabul that Ghani believes were planned by militants hiding on Pakistan's side of the porous, rugged border soured relations further.

Pakistani Interior Minister Chaudhry Nisar Ali Khan has said he wanted all refugees repatriated.

"The cards will not be extended," he said. "They expire at the end of this year."

There are four months left for the neighbours to patch things up, but for now the mood is hostile.

Since Ghani pointed the finger of blame across the border for the attacks, Pakistani flags and currency have been burnt by protesters. Pakistani diplomats in Kabul say they are restricting their movements.

As thousands arrive from Pakistan, others are seeking ways to leave.
There's always Syria Libya Greece Serbia Hungary Austria Germany...
Humanitarian organisations estimate that nearly one million Afghans have been internally displaced by fighting, and on the streets of Kabul, conversations quickly turn to departure. Almost everyone knows someone attempting to get to Europe.
Link


Home Front: WoT
Six Yemeni inmates sent from Gitmo to Oman
2015-06-14
Washington -- A pause in prisoner transfers from Guantanamo Bay has ended with the arrival on Saturday in Oman of six Yemenis long held at the US prison for suspected terrorists. It was the first movement of detainees out of Guantanamo in five months as Congress considers new restrictions on transfers.

The six men boarded a flight on Friday from the US facility in Cuba, and their transfer reduced Guantanamo’s population to 116. President Barack Obama has now transferred more than half the 242 detainees who were at Guantanamo when he was sworn into office in 2009 after campaigning to close it. But he is far from achieving that goal. With just a year and a half left in his second term, final transfer approvals are coming slowly from the Pentagon and lawmakers are threatening to make movement out even harder.

The transfers to Oman are the first to win final approval by Defence Secretary Ash Carter, who has been on the job four months. The six include Emad Abdullah Hassan, who has been on hunger strikes since 2007 in protest of his confinement without charge since 2002. In court filings protesting force-feeding practices, Hassan said detainees have been force-fed up to a gallon at a time of nutrients and water.
And that's why he's alive today...
The US accuses him of being one of many bodyguards to Al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden and of being part of a group planning to attack Nato and American troops after the 2001 invasion of Afghanistan.

The five other detainees sent to Oman were identified by the Pentagon as:

— Idris Ahmad ‘Abd Al Qadir Idris and Jalal Salam Awad Awad, also both alleged bodyguards to bin Laden.

— Sharaf Ahmad Muhammad Mas’ud, whom the US said fought American soldiers at Tora Bora, Afghanistan, before his capture in Pakistan.

— Saa’d Nasser Moqbil Al Azani, a religious teacher whom the US believes had ties to bin Laden’s religious adviser; and
— Muhammad Ali Salem Al Zarnuki, who allegedly arrived in Afghanistan as early as 1998 to fight and support the Taleban.

“The US is grateful to the government of Oman for its humanitarian gesture and willingness to support ongoing US efforts to close the Guantanamo Bay detention facility,” the Defence Department said.

The state-run Oman News Agency reported that the men arrived in the sultanate and would be living there “temporarily.”
Until they report back to Houthi HQ...
His Majesty Sultan Qaboos bin Said of Oman approved the men being in the country to aid the US government while also taking into account the men’s “humanitarian circumstances,” the agency reported.

The 11 detainees transferred so far in 2015 have all been from Yemen. Forty-three of the 51 remaining detainees who have been approved for transfer are from Yemen.

The Obama administration won’t send them home due to instability in Yemen, which has seen Houthis take the capital, Sanaa, and other areas despite a campaign of Saudi-led airstrikes targeting them. Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, the network’s Yemeni branch that the US considers to be the most dangerous affiliate, also remains active.

“We are working feverishly to transfer each of the 51 detainees currently approved for transfer,” said Ian Moss, who works on detainee transfers at the State Department. “It is not in our national security interest to continue to detain individuals if we as a government have determined that they can be transferred from Guantanamo responsibly.”

Some lawmakers want to impose stiffer requirements for transferring Guantanamo detainees to other countries. Obama has threatened to veto a House bill in part because of the Guantanamo restrictions.

An administration official said Oman agreed to accept the six Yemeni detainees about a year ago. But the defense secretary must give final approval to the move, and that has been a slow process at the Pentagon.

The US administration official, speaking on a condition of anonymity without authorization to go on the record, said the Pentagon has sent no further transfer notification to Congress, which is required 30 days before detainees can be moved.
In a better world there would be consequences for ignoring the law...
Link


Afghanistan
Daesh beheads 10 Taleban militants in Afghanistan
2015-06-04
h/t Gates of Vienna
At least 10 Taleban militants were allegedly beheaded by Daesh in Afghanistan where both are locked in a battle for control of many regions, Efe news agency reported on Wednesday.

A group of Daesh insurgents on Tuesday intercepted a dozen Taleban militants in a remote area in the eastern province of Nangarhar and beheaded them, said Numan Hatifi of the 201st Corps of the Afghan National Army.

The Taleban militants were captured while trying to flee after a gun battle with the Afghan security forces, official source said.

Dozens of insurgents have died or been injured in the last few weeks in armed clashes between the Taleban and the Daesh to gain control over several regions of Nangarhar.
Link



Warning: Undefined property: stdClass::$T in /data/rantburg.com/www/pgrecentorg.php on line 132
-12 More